
Nobody can “make” us give up on trauma recovery.
They can try.
They can create circumstances that make it very, very hard for us to be patient and self-compassionate and grounded, as we need to be to realistically work our trauma recovery.
They can distract us.
They can try to hijack our focus.
They can try to influence our self-talk.
They can try to deprive us of resources we need to manage our physiology.
They can do all kinds of things that can make it hard as hell for us to stay focused on our goals and values, the future we’re trying to create.
But they can’t “make” us give up.
They can’t “make” us harm ourselves.
They can’t “make” us kill ourselves.
Understand: it is not, in any way, shape, or form, “easy” to stay committed to our trauma recovery when a person or institution is out to make us feel like garbage.
I’m not minimizing the massive influence others can have on us. That’s real.
I’ll never tell you, as some therapists might, that no one can “make” you feel anything. Other peoples’ behavior can make it ENORMOUSLY easy to feel certain feelings, and ENORMOUSLY difficult to feel anything else. That’s real.
But I will tell you: no one can “make” us surrender in our head.
No one can “make” us decide that trauma recovery is not worth it.
No one can “make” us give up on our “parts” and inner child.
This post isn’t some bullsh*t toxic positivity “you control everything about your experience” spiel. Obviously other people can exert such an influence on our experience, that in no realistic way are we “choosing” what to feel in those moments.
And let’s be clear about the fact that certain people very much want us believing, at the core of our being, that they CAN “make” us give up.
But they can’t.
And that’s why we’re going to win.
Remember that scene at the end of “The Truman Show” where Truman, determined to sail his boat to the edge of his world, is buffeted by heavy storms sent by the “director” of the show, who is equally determined to drown him?
We are Truman.
And, like Truman, we’re not giving up— no matter how intense and scary the storm.
(Believe me: I understand exactly how intense and scary the storm can get. I’m not guessing. I know what you’re up against.)
Breathe. Blink. Focus.
And remember Truman.
